Arabic for non-Arabic Speakers
Learn Arabic language with this practical course! Master listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills. Discover the Arabic alphabet, script, and pronunciation. Gain vocabulary, expressions, and grammar used in the Arabic-speaking world. Perfect for students, professionals, and anyone interested in the Arabic language.
What you’ll learn
- Letter forms; initial, medial, and final. • To use the language in dealing with others, through various topics. • Masculine & Feminine • Long vowels, short Vow
- • Features and Interesting Facts about Arabic language,read, write, and use the Alphabet successfully, connecting, and non-connecting cursive script.
- • Greetings • Colors • Parts of house • Around town • At the restaurant
- • Subject Pronouns & Possessive Yaa • Demonstratives • Prepositions • Essential Expressions • Numbers (1 – 1000000) • People and family • Days, Months • How to
Marhaban, welcome to Arabic for non-Arabic Speakers course. Before we begin, let’s go over what you’ll see in this course. This practical course will help you acquire the necessary tools to accomplish this goal, whether your focus is vocabulary, grammar, or pronunciation.
To master the four key skills of a language-listening, speaking, reading, and writing, each section is divided into lessons (videos) with clear instructions and explanations including many helpful examples and learning tips.
This course includes Arabic script to help you get started with reading and handwriting. However, you should rely mostly on the videos to improve you pronunciation skills.
We will mainly focus on Modern Standard Arabic (MSA), and practical vocabulary, expressions, and basic grammar that are used in the Arabic-speaking world.
The most basic thing to know about Arabic script is that it’s written and read from right to left. There are twenty-eight letters in the Arabic alphabet. Arabic is a cursive script, meaning that most letters are connected to the ones before and after them. There are six exceptional letters that don’t connect to the ones that come after them, we will cover them later.
You’ll learn a bunch of useful vocabulary and phrases that are relevant to the topic of the lesson. Try to memorize them. Exercises appear after a group of lessons. These exercises help you practice what you have learned.
Try not to do too much at a time. Instead, try to work with the material ideally on daily basis or several times a week for about 30 minutes without interruption. Before you start with the lessons in section 2, try to familiarize yourself with the Arabic alphabet, script, and pronunciation.
Are you ready? Let’s go.
Who this course is for:
- Students who are interested in learning the Arabic language.
- People who are regularly in contact with Arabic-speaking community.
- Business professionals who are in liaisons with Arabic speakers.
- Learners who will be stationed in an Arabic speaking country or region.